Classic Audiobook Collection - The Grandfather's War by Murray Leinster ~ Full Audiobook [scifi]
Episode Date: February 25, 2025The Grandfather's War by Murray Leinster audiobook. Genre: scifi On the interstellar frontier, war is supposed to be obsolete. Distance, physics, and modern technology have made the old-style clash o...f fleets and armies effectively impossible. So when the Med Service receives an urgent call from the colony world Phaedra II, warning of casualties from a war about to erupt, the request sounds like a misunderstanding - until Dr. Calhoun is dispatched in a small Med Ship to find out what is really happening. Traveling with his sharp-eyed, furred companion Murgatroyd, Calhoun expects to solve a public health problem, not enter a political minefield. But Phaedra II is a society splitting along a frightening fault line: a conflict of generations where children and parents are lining up as enemies, each side convinced the other is destroying their future. As tensions harden into open violence, Calhoun must do what the Med Service does best - treat the wounded, trace the true cause of the crisis, and outthink forces that prefer panic to cure. In a story that blends action, invention, and social commentary, Leinster turns a medical mission into a race to prevent a world from tearing itself apart. For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 01 (00:18:44) Chapter 02 (00:44:51) Chapter 03 (01:04:54) Chapter 04 (01:28:14) Chapter 05 (01:45:34) Chapter 06 (02:05:43) Chapter 07 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The Grandfather's War by Murray Leinster, Part 1
No man can be fully efficient if he expects praise or appreciation for what he does.
The uncertainty of this reward, as experienced, leads to modification of one's actions to
increase its probability.
If a man permits himself the purpose of securing admiration, he tends to make that purpose
primary, and the doing of his proper work secondary.
This costs human lives.
Manual, Interstellar Medical Service, Pages 17 and 18.
The Little Med Ship seemed absolutely motionless when the hour-off warning word.
Then it continued to seem motionless.
The background noise tapes went on, making the small unrelated sounds that exist unnoticed.
in all places where human beings dwell,
but which have to be provided in a ship in overdrive,
so a man doesn't go ship-happy from the dead stillness.
The hour-off warning was notice of a change in the shape of things.
Calhoun put aside his book,
the Manual of the Med Service, and yawned.
He got up from his bunk to tidy ship.
Mergatroyd the Turmal, opened his eyes,
and regarded him drowsily,
without uncoiling his furry tail from about his nose.
I wish, said Calhoun critically, that I could act with your realistic appraisal of facts,
Murgatroyd.
This is a case of no importance whatever, and you treat it as such, while I fume whenever I think
of its futility.
We are a token mission, Murgatroyd, a politeness of the Med Service, which has to respond
to hysterical summonses as well as sensible ones.
Our time is thrown away.
Mergatroyd blinked somulently.
Calhoun grinned wily at him.
The Med Ship was a 50-ton space vessel,
very small indeed in these days,
with the crew consisting exclusively of Calhoun and Mergatroyd the Tormole.
It was one of those little ships the Med Service
tries to have called at every colonized planet,
at least once in four or five years.
The idea is to make sure that all new developments in public health and individual medicine
will spread as widely and as fast as can be managed.
There were larger medcraft to handle dangerous situations and emergencies of novel form,
but all med ships were expected to handle everything possible,
if only because space travel consumed such quantities of time.
This particular journey, for example, an emergency message had come to sector headquarters
from the planetary government of Fadra 2.
Carried on a commercial vessel in overdrive at many times the speed of light, it had taken
three months to reach headquarters, and the emergency in which it asked aid was absurd.
There was, said the message, a state of war between Fadra 2 and Canis 3.
Military action against Canis III would begin very shortly.
Met Service 8 for injured and ill would be needed.
It was therefore requested at once.
The bare idea of war naturally was ridiculous.
There could not be war between planets.
Worlds communicated with each other by spaceships to be sure,
but the Laudler Interplanetary Drive would not work save in unstressed space,
and of course overdrive was equally inoperable in a planet's gravitational field.
So a ship, setting out for the stars, had to be lifted not less than five planetary diameters
from the ground before it could turn on any drive of its own.
Similarly, it had to be lowered an equal distance to our landings after its drive became unusable.
Space travel was practical only because there were landing grids.
those huge structures of steel, which used the power of a planet's ionosphere, to generate the force
fields for the docking and launching of ships of space. Hence, landing grids were necessary for landings,
and no world would land a hostile ship upon its surface, but a landing grid could launch bombs or missiles
as well as ships, and hence could defend its planet absolutely. So there could be no attacks,
and there could be no defense.
So wars could not be fought.
The whole thing's nonsense, said Calhoun.
We'll get there, and we've been three months on the way,
and the situation is six months old,
and either it's all been compromised,
or it's long forgotten, and nobody will like being reminded of it.
And we've wasted our time and talents on a thankless job that doesn't exist, and couldn't.
The universe has fallen.
on evil days, Murgatroyd, and we are the victims.
Murgatroyd leisurely uncurled his tail from about his nose.
When Calhoun talked at such length, it meant sociability.
Murgatroyd got up and stretched and said,
Gee!
He waited.
If Calhoun really meant to go in for conversation,
Mercutroyd would join in.
He adored pretending that he was human.
he and his kind imitated human actions as parrots imitated human speech.
Murgatroyd frisked a little to show his readiness for talk.
Chee, chee, he said conversationally.
I notice that we agree, said Calhoun.
Let's clean up.
He began those small items of housekeeping which one neglects
when nothing can happen for a long time ahead.
Books back in place, files restructs,
door to order, the special data reels Calhoun had been required to study, Calhoun made all neat and
orderly against landing and possible visitors. Presently the breakout clock indicated 25 minutes
more in overdrive. Calhoun yawned again. As an interstellar service organization, the Med Service
sometimes had to do rather foolish things. Governments run by politicians required them,
yet med service representatives always had to be well informed on problems which appeared.
During this journey, Calhoun had been ordered to read up on the ancient insanity, once called
the Art of War. He didn't like what he learned about the doings of his ancestors.
He reflected that it was lucky that such things couldn't happen anymore.
He yawned again.
He was strapped to in the control chair a good ten minutes before the ship was
due to return to a normal state of things. He allowed himself the luxury of still another yawn.
He waited. The warning tape word a second time, a voice said,
When the gong sounds break out will be five seconds off. There was a heavy rhythmic tick-tucking.
It went on and on. Then the gong and a voice said, five, four, four,
three, two, it did not complete the count. There was a tearing, rending noise, and the spitting of an arc.
There was the smell of ozone. The med ship bucked like a plunging horse. It came out of overdrive two seconds
ahead of time. The automatic emergency rockets roared, and it plunged this way, and changed course
violently, and plunged to that, and seemed to fight desperately against something that frustrated.
every maneuver it tried. Calhoun's hair stood on end until he realized that the external
field indicator showed a terrific artificial force field gripping the ship. He cut off the rockets as
their jerking tried to tear him out of his chair. There was stillness. Calhoun rasped into
the space phone. What's going on? This is Med Ship Esclippus 20. This is a neutral vessel.
The term neutral vessel was new in Calhoun's vocabulary.
He learned it while studying the manners and customs of war in overdrive.
Cut off those force fields!
Murgatroy shrilled indignantly.
Some erratic movement of the ship had flung him into Calhoun's bunk,
where he'd held fast to a blanket with all four paws.
Then another wild jerking threw him and the blanket together into a corner,
where he fought to get clear, chattering bitterly the while.
We're non-combatants, snapped Calhoun, another new term.
A voice growled out of the spacephone speaker.
Set up for light-beam communication, it said heavily.
In the meantime, keep silence.
Calhoun snorted.
But a med ship was not an armed ship.
There were no armed vessels nowadays, not in the normal course of events.
but vessels of some sort had been on the watch for a ship coming to this particular place.
He thought of the word blockade, another part of his education in the outmoded art of war.
Canis III was blockaded.
He searched for the ship that had him fast.
Nothing.
He stepped up the magnification of his vision screens.
Again, nothing.
The sun, Canis, flamed ahead and below.
and there were suspiciously bright stars, which by their coloring were probably planets.
But the Med Ship was still well beyond the habitable part of a Sal-class Sun's solar system.
Calhoun pulled a photo cell out of its socket and waited.
A new and very bright light winked into being.
It wavered.
He stuck the photo cell to the screen, covering the brightness.
He plugged in its cord to an audience.
amplifier. A dull humming sounded. Not quite as clearly as a spacephone voice, but clear enough,
a voice said, "'If you are Med Ship Esclippus 20, answer by light beam, quoting your orders.'
Calhoun was already stabbing another button, and somewhere a signal lamp was extruding itself
from its recess in the hull. He said, irritably,
I'll show you my orders, but I do not put on performances of dramatic readings.
This is the devil of a business.
I came here on request to be a ministering angel or a lady with a lamp or something equally improbable.
I did not come to be snatched out of overdrive, even if you have a war on.
This is a med ship.
The slightly blurred voice said as heavily as before.
This is a war, yes.
We expected you.
We wish you to take our final warning to Kahnus III.
Follow us to our base, and you will be briefed.
Calhoun said tartly.
Suppose you tow me.
When you dragged me out of overdrive, you played the devil with my power.
Mercatorid said,
Chee, and tried to stand on his hind legs to look at the screen.
Calhoun brushed him away.
When acknowledgement came from the unseen other shit,
and the curious cushiony drag of the towing beam began to be felt,
he cut off the microphone to the light beam.
Then he said severely to Murgatryd.
What I said was not quite true, Murgatroyd,
but there is a war on. To be neutral, I have to appear impressively helpless.
That is what neutrality means.
But he was far from easy in his mind.
Wars between worlds were flatly impossible.
The facts of space travel made them unthinkable.
Yet, there seemed to be a war.
Something was happening, anyhow, which was contrary to all the facts of life in modern times.
And Calhoun was involved in it.
It demanded that he immediately changed all his opinions and all his ideas of what he might have to do.
The Met Service could not take sides in a war, of course.
It had no right to help one side or the other.
its unalterable function was to prevent the needless death of human beings,
so it could not help one combatant to victory.
On the other hand, it could not merely stand by,
tending the wounded, and by alleviating individual catastrophes allow their numbers to mount.
This, said Calhoun, is the devil.
Gee! said Mercutroid.
The med ship was being towed.
Calhoun had asked for it, and it was being done.
There should have been no way to tow him, short of a physical linkage between ships.
There were force fields which could perform that function, landing grids used them constantly,
but ships did not mount them, not ordinary ships anyhow.
That fact bothered Calhoun.
Somebody's gone to a lot of trouble, he said, scowling,
as if wars were coming back into fashion and somebody was getting set to fight them.
Who's got us, anyhow?
The request for Med Service had come from Fadra II,
but the military action, if any, had been stated to be due on Cannes III.
The flaming nearby Sun and its family of planets was the Canets solo system.
The odds were, therefore, that he'd been snatched out of overdrive by the Fadron fleet.
He'd been expected.
They'd ordered him not to use the space phone.
The local forces wouldn't care if the planet overheard.
The invaders might.
Unless there were two space fleets and emptiness jockeying for position for a battle in the void.
But that was preposterous.
There could be no battles in unstressed space,
where any ship could flick into overdrive flight in the fraction of a second.
Mergatroyd, said Calhoun, queried.
Rosalie. This is all wrong. I can't make head or tail of anything, and I've got a feeling that
there is something considerably more wrong than I can figure out. At a guess, it's probably a
phadron vessel that's hooked on to us. They didn't seem surprised when I said who I was,
but he checked his instrument board. He examined the screens. There were planets of the yellow sun,
which now was nearly dead ahead.
Calhoun saw an almost infinitely thin crescent and knew that it was the sunward world toward which he was being towed.
Actually, he didn't need a tow.
He'd asked for it for no particular reason except to put whoever had stopped him in the wrong.
To injure a med ship would be improper even in war, especially in war.
He went back to the external field dial.
There was a force field gripping the ship.
It was of the type used by landing grids, a type impractical for use on shipboard.
A grid to generate such a force field had to have one foot of diameter for roughly every ten miles of range.
A ship to have the range of his captor would have to be as big as a planetary landing grid,
and no planetary landing grid could handle it.
Then Calhoun's eyes popped open and his jaw dropped.
"'Mergatroyd,' he said appalled.
"'Confound them, it's true.
They found a way to fight.'
Wars had not been fought for many hundreds of years, and there was no need for them now.
Calhoun had only lately been studying the records of warfare in all its aspects and consequences,
and as a medical man, he felt outraged.
Organized slaughter had not seemed a sane process for arriving at political
conclusions. The whole galactic culture was based upon the happy convictions that wars could never
happen again. If it was possible, they probably would. Calhoun knew humanity well enough to be sure of that.
Gee, said Mercutoy, inquiringly. You're lucky to be a terminal, Calhoun told him. You never have to be
ashamed of your kind. The background information he had to be.
about warfare in general, made him feel skeptical in advance about the information he would presently be
given. It would be what used to be called propaganda, given him under the name of briefing.
It would agree with him that wars in general were horrible, but it would most plausibly point
out with deep regret that this particular war fought by this particular side was both admirable
and justified.
Which, said Calhoun darkly,
I wouldn't believe even if it were true.
End of Part 1.
Part 2 of the Grandfather's War by Murray Lainster.
This Libre Vox recording is in the public domain.
Part 2.
Information secure from others is invariably inaccurate in some fashion.
A complete and reason statement of a series of events is almost necessarily trimmed and distorted and edited,
or it would not appear reasonable and complete.
Truly factual accounts of any series of happenings will, if honest, contain inconsistent or irrational elements.
Reality is far too complex to be reduced to simple statements without much suppression of fact.
Manual Interstellar Medical Service, page 25.
He was able to verify his guess about the means by which interstellar war became practical
when the Med Ship was landed.
Normally a landing grid was a gigantic squat structure of steel girders, half a mile high and
a full mile in diameter.
It rested upon bedrock, was cemented into unbreakable union with the substance of its
planet and tapped the ionosphere for power.
When the Med Ship reached the abysmal darkness of the nearest planet's shadow,
there were long, long pauses in which it hung apparently motionless in space.
There were occasional vast swingings as if something reached out and made sure where it was.
And Calhoun made use of his nearest object indicator and observed that something very huge
fumbled about and presently became stationary in emptiness, and then moved swiftly and assuredly
down into the blackness which was the planet's nightside. When it and the planetary surface were
one, the Med Ship began its swift descent in the grip of landing grid-type force fields. It landed
in the center of a grid, but not a typical grid. This was more monstrous in size than any space-form.
boasted. It was not squat either, but as tall as it was wide. As the ship descended,
he saw lights in a control system cell midway to the ground. It was amazing but obvious. The
Med Ship's captors had built a landing grid which was itself a spaceship. It was a grid which
could cross the void between stars. It could wage offensive war. It's in full. It's in
eternally simple, Calhoun told Mercotroid distastefully.
The regular landing grid hooks onto something in space and pulls it to the ground.
This thing hooks onto something on the ground and pushes itself out into space.
It'll travel by loller or overdrive, and when it gets somewhere, it can lock onto any part of
another world and pull itself down to that and stay anchored to it.
Then it can land the fleet that travel.
with it. It's partly a floating dry-dock and partly a landing craft, and actually it's both.
It's a ready-made spaceport anywhere it chooses to land, which means that it's the deadliest
weapon in the past thousand years. Murgatroy climbed on his lap and blinked wisely at the
screens. They showed the surroundings of the now-grounded Med Ship standing on his tail. There were
innumerable stars overhead. All about there was the whiteness of snow. But there were lights.
Ships at rest lay upon the icy ground. I suspect, growled Calhoun, that I could make a dash
on emergency rockets and get behind the horizon before they could catch me. But this is just a
regular military base. He considered his recent studies of historic wars, of battles and massacres
and looting and rapine. Even modern civilized men would revert very swiftly to savagery once
they had fought a battle. Enormities unthinkable that other times would occur promptly if men
went back to barbarity. Such things might already be present in the minds of the crews of these
spaceships.
You and I, Murgatroyd, said Calhoun,
may be the only wholly rational men on this planet,
and you aren't a man.
Chee!
shrilled Murgatroyd.
He seemed glad of it.
But we have to survey the situation
before we attempt anything noble and useless,
Calhoun observed.
But still, what's that?
He stared at a situation.
screen which showed lights on the ground moving toward the Med Ship. They were carried by men on foot
walking on the snow. As they grew nearer, it appeared that there were also weapons in the group.
They were curious, ugly instruments, like sporting rifles, save that their boars were impossibly large.
They would be—Kalhoun searched his new store of information. They would be launchers of miniature rockets,
capable of firing small missiles with shaped charges which could wreck the med ship easily.
Thirty yards off they separated to surround the ship.
A single man advanced.
I'm going to let him in, Murgertrude, observed Calhoun.
In wartime a man is expected to be polite to anything with a weapon capable of blowing him up.
It's one of the laws of war.
He opened both the inner and outer lock.
doors. The glow from inside the ship shone out on white untrodden snow. Calhoun stood in the opening,
observing that as his breath went out of the outer opening, it turned to white mist.
"'My name is Calhoun,' he said curtly, to the single dark figure still approaching.
"'Interstellar medical service, a neutral, a non-combatant, and at the moment very much annoyed by what
this happened. A gray-bearded man with grim eyes advanced into the light from the opened port.
He nodded.
"'My name is Walker,' he said, as curtly.
"'I suppose I'm the leader of this military expedition. At least my son is the leader of the
enemy, which makes me the logical man to direct the attack upon them.'
Calhoun did not quite believe his ears, but he pricked them up.
a father and son on opposite sides would hardly have been trusted by either faction as warfare used to be conducted and certainly their relationship would hardly be a special qualification for leadership at any time
he made a gesture of invitation and the gray-bearded man climbed the ladder to the port somehow he did not lose the least trace of dignity in climbing he stepped solidly into the airlock and on into the cabin of the ship
ship. "'If I may, I'll close the lock doors,' said Calhoun.
"'If your men won't misinterpret the action. It's cold outside.'
The sturdy, bearded man shrugged his cape-clad shoulders.
"'They'll blast your ship if you try to take off,' he said.
They're in the mood to blast something. With the same air of massive confidence he moved to a seat.
Mercutroyd regarded him suspiciously. He ignored the little animal.
Well, he said impatiently.
I'm med-service, said Calhoun. I can prove it. I should be neutral in whatever is happening.
But I was asked for by the planetary government of Fadra. I think it likely that your ships come from Fadra.
Your great ship, in particular, wouldn't be needed by the local citizens.
How does the war go? The stocky man's eyes burned.
Are you laughing at me? he demanded.
"'I've been three months in overdrive,' Calhoun reminded him.
"'I haven't heard anything to laugh at in longer than that. No.'
"'The—our enemy,' said Walker bitterly.
"'Consider that they have won the war.
But you may be able to make them realize that they have not, and that they cannot.
We have been foolishly patient, but we can't risk forbearance any longer.
We mean to carry through to victory, even if we arrive at a while.
cutting our own throats for a victory celebration, and that is not unlikely.
Calhoun raised his eyebrows, but he nodded.
His studies had told him that a war psychology was a highly emotional one.
Our home planet, Fadra, had to be evacuated, said Walker, very grimly indeed.
There are signs of instability in our son.
Five years since we sent our older children to Canis III to build a world,
for all of us to move to. Our son could burst at any time. It is certain to flare up sometime,
and soon. We sent our children because the place of danger was at home. We urged them to work feverously.
We sent the young women as well as the men at the beginning, so that if our planet did crisp
and melt when our son went off there would still be children of our children to live on.
When we dared, when they could feed and shelter them, we sent younger boys and girls to safety,
overburdening the new colony with mouths to feed, but at least staying ourselves where the danger was.
Later we sent even the small children, as the signs of an imminent catalystm became more threatening.
Calhoun nodded again.
There were not many novas in the galaxy in any one year, even among the millions of billions of
stars it held. But there had been at least one colony which had had to be shifted because of
evidence of solar instability. The job in that case was not complete when the flare-up came.
The evacuation of a world, though, would never be an easy task. The population had to be moved
late years of distance. Space travel takes time, even at 30 times the speed of light.
where at the time of disaster, the deadline for removal, could not be known exactly, the course
adopted by Fadra was logical. Young men and women were best sent off first. They could make new homes
for themselves and for others to follow them. They could work harder and longer for the purpose
than any other age group, and they would best assure the permanent survival of somebody.
The new colony would have to be a place of frantic, unresting labor,
a feverish round-the-clock endeavor,
because the time scale for working was necessarily unknown,
but was extremely unlikely to be enough.
When they could be burdened further,
younger boys and girls would be shipped,
old enough to help but not to pioneer.
They could be sent to safety in a partly built colony.
Later, smaller children could be sent,
needing care from their older contemporaries.
Only at long last would the adults leave their world for the new.
They would stay where the danger was until all the younger ones were secure.
But now, said Walker, thickly, our children have made their world,
and now they refuse to receive their parents and grandparents.
They have a world of young people only, under no authority but their own.
They say that we lied to them about the coming flare of Fadre's son,
that we enslave them and made them use their youth to build a new world we now demand to take over.
They are willing for Fadra's son to burst and kill the rest of us,
so they can live as they please without a care for us.
Calhoun said nothing.
It is a part of medical training to recognize that information obtained from others is never wholly accurate.
Conceding the facts, he would still be getting from Walker only one interpretation of them.
There is an instinct in the young to become independent of adults, and an instinct in adults to be
protective past all reason. There is, in one sense, always a war between the generations on all
planets, not only Fadra and Canis III. It is a conflict between instincts which themselves are
necessary, and perhaps the conflict as such is necessary for some purpose of the race.
They grew tired of the effort building the colony required, said Walker, his eyes burning as before.
So they decided to doubt its need. They sent some of their number back to Fadra to verify
our observations of the sun's behavior. Our observations. It happened that they came at a time
when the disturbances in the sun were temporarily quiet.
So our children decided that we were overtimid,
that there was no danger to us, that we demanded too much.
They refused to build more shelters and to clear and plant more land.
They even refused to land more ships from Fadra, lest we burdened them with more mouths to feed.
They declared for rest, for ease.
They declared themselves independent of them.
of us. They disowned us. Sharper than a serpent's tooth.
There's an ungrateful child, said Calhoun. So I've heard. So you declared war.
We did, raged Walker. We are men. Haven't we wives to protect? We'll fight even our children
for the safety of their mothers. And we have grandchildren on Canis III. What's happening
and is happening there? What they're doing? He seemed to start.
strangle on his fury. Our children are lost to us. They destroy us and our wives, and they destroy
themselves, and they will destroy our grandchildren. We fight. Murgertroyd climbed into Calhoun's
lap and cuddled close to him. Turmalls are peaceful, little animals. The fury and bitterness
in Walker's tone upset Murgatroyd. He took refuge from anger in closeness to Calhoun.
"'So the wars between you and your children and grandchildren,' observed Calhoun.
"'As a med shipman, what's happened to date?
How has the fighting gone? What's the state of things right now?'
"'We've accomplished nothing,' rasped Walker.
"'We've been too soft-hearted. We don't want to kill them, not even after what they've done.
But they are willing to kill us.
Only a week ago we sent a cruiser in to broadcast propaganda.
We consider that there must be some decency left even in our children.
No ship can use any drive close to a planet, of course.
We sent the cruiser in on a course to form a parabolic semi-orbit,
riding momentum down close to atmosphere above Canopolis,
where it would be broadcast on standard communication frequencies,
and go out to clear space again.
But they used the landing grid to strew its path with rocks and boulders.
It smashed into them.
Its hull was punctured in fifty places.
Every man died.
Calhoun did not change expression.
This was an interview to learn the facts of a situation in which the Med Service had been
asked to act.
It was not an occasion in which to be horrified.
He said,
what did you expect of the med service when you asked for its help?
We thought, said Walker very bitterly indeed, that we would have prisoners.
We prepared hospital ships to tend our children who might be hurt.
We wanted every possible aid in that, no matter what our children have done.
Yet you have no prisoners? asked Calhoun.
He didn't grasp this affair yet.
It was too far out of the ordinary for,
quick judgment. Any war in modern times would have seemed strange enough, but a full-scale war
between parents and children on a planetary scale was a little too much to grasp in all its
implications in a hurry. We've won prisoner, said Walker scornfully. We caught him because we hope to
do something with him. We failed. You'll take him back. We don't want him. Before you go,
you will be told our plans for fighting, for the destruction if we must, of our own children.
But it is better for us to destroy them than to let them destroy our grandchildren as they are doing.
This accusation about grandchildren did not seem conceivably true.
Calhoun, however, did not question it, he said, reflectively,
you're going about this affair in a queer fashion, whether as a war or an exercise in parental discipline.
sending word of your plans to one supposed enemy, for instance.
Walker stood up, his cheek twitched.
At any instant now, Fadra's son may go.
It may have done so since we heard.
And our wives, our children's mothers, are on Fadra.
If our children have murdered them by refusing them refuge,
then we will have nothing left but the right...
There was a pounding on the lock door.
"'I'm through,' rasped Walker.
He went to the lock and opened the doors.
"'This medman,' he said to those outside,
"'we'll come and see what we've made ready.
Then he'll take our prisoner back to Canis.
He'll report what he knows. It may do some good.'
He stepped out of the airlock, flinging a command to Calhoun to follow.
Calhoun grunted to himself.
He opened a cabinet and donned heavy winter garments.
Murgatroyd said,
Chee, in alarm, when it appeared that Calhoun was going to leave him.
Calhoun snapped his fingers, and Murgatroyd leaped up into his arms.
Calhoun tucked him under his coat and followed Walker down into the snow.
This undoubtedly was the next planet out from the colonized Canis III.
It would be Canis 4, and a very small excess of carbon dioxide in its atmosphere would keep it warmer,
by the greenhouse effect, than its distance from the local sun would otherwise imply.
The snow was winter snow only. This was not too cold a base for military operations against the planet
next inward toward the sun. Walker strode ahead toward the rows of spaceship hulls about the singularly
spidery-grip ship. It occurred to Calhoun that astrogating such a ship would be very much like
handling an oversized, open-ended wastebasket.
A monstrous overdrive field would be needed, and keeping its metal above the brittle point on any
really long space voyage would be difficult indeed.
But it was here.
It had undoubtedly lifted itself from Fadra.
It had landed itself here and should be able to land on Canis, and then let down, after itself,
the war fleet now clustered about its base.
But Calhoun tried to take comfort in the difficulty of traveling really long distances,
up in the tens of twenties of late years, with such a creation.
Possibly, just possibly, warfare would still be limited to relatively nearby worlds.
We thought, rumbled Walker, that we might excavate shelters here
so we could bring the rest of Fadre's population here to wait out the war,
so they'd be safe if Fadre's sun blew, but we couldn't feed them all, so we have to blast a
reception for ourselves on the world our children have made.
They came to a ship which was larger than any except the great ship.
Nearly half its hull had been opened, and a gigantic tent set up against it.
It was a huge machine shop.
A spaceship inside was evidently the cruiser of which Walker had spoken.
Cohoon could see where ragged old holes had been made in its hull.
Men of middle age or older worked upon it with a somewhat dogged air,
but Walker pointed to another object,
almost half the size of the Med Ship.
Men worked on that, too.
It was a missile, not man-carrying,
with relatively enormous fuel capacity for its drive rockets.
Look that over, commanded Walker.
That's a rocket.
missile, a robot-fighting machine that will start from space with plenty of rocket fuel for maneuvering.
It will fight and dodge its way down into the middle of the grid at Canopolis, which our children
refuse to use to land their parents. In three days from now, we use this to blast that grid,
and as much as Canopolis as may go with it for the blast of a mechaton bomb. Then our grid ship will land,
and our fleet will follow it down,
and we'll be aground on canis with blast rifles and flame and more bombs
to fight for our rifle foothold on our children's world.
When our fighting men are landed,
our ships will begin to bring in our wives from Fadra,
if they are still alive, while we fight to make them safe.
We'll fight our children as if they were wild beasts,
the way they've treated us.
We begin this fight in just three days,
when that missile is ready and tested.
If they kill us, so much the better.
But we'll make them do their murder with their hands, with their guns,
with the weapons they've doubtless made.
But they shall not murder us by disowning us.
And if we have to kill them to save our grandchildren,
we begin to do so in just three days.
Take them that message.
Calhoun said,
I'm afraid they won't believe me.
They'll learn they must, growled Walker.
Then he said abruptly,
What repairs does your ship need?
We'll bring it here and repair it,
and then you'll take our prisoner and carry him and your message back to his own kind.
Our children.
The irony and the fury and the frustration in his tone,
as he said children, made Murgatroyd wriggle underneath Calhoun's coat.
I find, said Calhoun, that all I need is power.
You drained my overdrive charges when you snatched my ship out of overdrive.
I've extra Duhainee cells, but one overdrive charge is a lot of power to lose.
You'll get it back, growled Walker.
Then take the prisoner and our warning to Canis.
Get them to surrender if you can.
Calhoun considered.
Under his coat,
Purgatroyd said, "'Chee! Chee! in a tone of some indignation.'
"'Thinking of the way of my own father with me,' said Calhoun Riley,
"'and accepting your story itself is quite true. How the devil can I make your children believe
that this time you aren't bluffing? Haven't you bluffed before?'
"'We've threatened,' said Walker, his eyes blazing. Yes. And we were too soft-hearted to carry out our
threats. We've tried everything short of force. But the time has come, when we have to be ruthless.
We have our wives to consider. Whom, observed Calhoun, I suspect you didn't dare have with you
because they wouldn't let you actually fight, no matter what your sons and daughters did.
But they're not here now, raged Walker, and nothing will stop us. Calhoun nodded.
in view of the situation as a whole, he almost believed it of the fathers of the colonists on Canis III.
But he wouldn't have believed it of his own father, regardless, and he did not think the young people of
Kenneth would believe it of theirs, yet there was nothing else for them to do.
It looked like he traveled three months in overdrive and painstakingly studied much distressing
information about the ancestors of modern men, only to arrive at
and witness the most heart-rending conflict in human history.
End of Part 3 of the Grandfather's War by Murray Leinster.
This Libre-Vox recording is in the public domain.
Part 3. The fact that one statement agrees with another statement does not mean that both
must be true. Too close an agreement may be proof that both statements are false.
Conversely, conflicting statements may tend to prove each other's ferity if the conflict is in their
interpretations of the fact they narrate.
Manual Interstellar Medical Service, Page 43
They brought the prisoner a bare hour later.
Sturdy, grizzled men had strung a line to the Med Ship's power bank, and there was that
small humming sound which nobody quite understands as power flowed into the Duhan
cells. The power men regarded the inside of the ship without curiosity, as if too much absorbed in
private bitterness to be interested in anything else. When they had gone, a small guard brought
the prisoner. Calhoun noted the expression on the faces of these men, too. They hated their
prisoner. But their faces showed the deep and wrenching bitterness a man does feel, when his children
have abandoned him for companions he considers worthless or worse.
A man hates those companions corrosively, and these men hated their prisoner.
But they could not help knowing that he also had abandoned some other father
whose feelings were like their own. So there was frustration even in their fury.
The prisoner came lightly up the ladder into the Med Ship. He was a very young man,
with a singularly fair complexion and a carriage at once challengingly jaunty and defiant.
Calhoun estimated his age as seven years less than his own, and immediately considered him
irritatingly callow and immature because of it.
You're my jailer, eh? said the prisoner rightly, as he entered the Med Ship's captain.
Or is this some new trick? They say they're sending me back. I doubt it.
It's true enough, said Calhoun.
Will you dog the airlock door, please? Do that, and we'll take off.
The young man looked at him brightly. He grinned.
No, he said happily. I won't.
Calhoun felt ignoble rage. There had been no great purpose in his request.
There could be none in the refusal.
So he took the prisoner by the collar and walked him into the airlock.
We are going to be lifted soon, he said gently.
If the outer door isn't dogged, the air will escape from the lock.
When it does, you will die.
I can't save you, because if the outer door isn't dogged,
all the air in the ship will go if I should try to help you.
Therefore, I advise you to dog the door.
He closed the inner door.
He looked sick.
Murgatroy looked alarmedly at him.
If I have to deal with that kind, Calhoun told the turmoil,
I have to have some evidence that I mean what I say.
If I don't, they'll be glassing me with their fathers.
The Med Ship stirred.
Calhoun glanced at the external field dial.
The mobile landing grid was locking a force field on.
The little ship lifted.
It went up and up and up.
Calhoun looked sicker.
The air in the lock was thinning swiftly.
Two miles high.
Three?
There were frantic metallic clangings.
The indicator said that the outer door was dogged tight.
Calhoun opened the inner door.
The young man stumbled in, shockingly white and gasping for breath.
Thanks, said Calhoun curtly.
He strapped himself in the control chair.
The vision screens showed half the universe pure darkness
and the rest a blaze of many colored specks of light.
They showed new stars appearing at the edge of the monstrous blackness.
The Med Ship was rising ever more swiftly.
Presently the black area was not half the universe.
It was a third.
Then a fifth.
A tenth.
It was a disk of pure darkness and a glory of myriad distant suns.
The external feel indicator dropped abruptly to zero.
The Med Ship was afloat in clear space.
space. Calhoun tried the Lawler Drive tentatively. It worked. The midship swung in a vast
curved course out of the dark planet's shadow. There was the sun, Canis, flaming in space.
Calhoun made brisk observations, set a new course, and the ship sped on with an unfelt acceleration.
This was, of course, the Lawler propulsion system, used for distances which were mere millions of
When the ship was entirely on automatic control, Calhoun swung around to his unwilling companion.
Mergatroyd was regarding the youthful stranger with intense curiosity.
He looked at Calhoun with some apprehension.
My name's Calhoun, Calhoun told him.
I'm med service.
There's Mergatroyd.
He's a tarmal.
Who were you and how did you get captured?
The prisoner went instantly into a pose of course.
of jaunty defiance.
My name is Fredericks, he said blandly.
What happens next?
I'm headed for Conest Three, said Calhoun, in part to land you, in part to try to do something
about this war.
How'd you get captured?
They made a raid, said young Frederick scornfully.
They landed a rocket out in open country.
We thought it was another propaganda bomb like they'd landed
before, telling us we were scoundrels and such bilge.
I went to see if there was something in it good for a laugh.
But it was bigger than usual.
I didn't know, but men had landed in it.
They jumped me, two of them.
Pile me in the rocket, and it took off.
Then we were picked up and brought where you landed.
They tried to mind-launder me.
He laughed derisively,
showing me science stuff proving Fadre's son was going to blow
and cook the old home planet, lecturing me that we were all fools on, Candace,
undutiful sons, and so on, saying that to kill our parents wouldn't pay.
Would it? Ask Calhoun, pay, that is?
Frederick grinned in a superior manner.
You're pulling more of it, huh?
I don't know science, but I know they've been lying to us.
Look, they sent the first gang to Canis five years.
ago. Didn't send equipment with them, no more than they had to. Packed the ships full of people.
They were twenty years old and so on. They had to sweat, had to sweat out oars and make equipment,
and try to build shelters and plant food. There were more of them arriving all the time,
shipped away from Fager with starvation rations, so more of them could be shipped.
All young people, remember. They had to sweat to keep them.
starving, with all the new ones coming all the time.
Everybody had to pitch in the minute they got there.
You never heard that, did you?
Yes, said Calhoun.
They worked plenty, said Frederick scornfully.
Good little girls and boys.
When they got nearly caught up and figured that maybe in another month they could breathe easy,
why, then the old folks on Fadra began to ship younger kids.
Me a mom.
I was fifteen, and we hit Canis like a flood.
There wasn't shelter or food or clothes to spare, but they had to feed us.
So we had to help by working, and I worked.
I built houses and grated streets and wrestled pipe for plumbing and sewage.
The older boys were making it, and I planted ground and I chopped trees, no loafing, no fun.
They piled us on Canis so fast it was root-haar.
or die, and we rooted.
Then, just when we began to think that we could begin to take a breather, they started dumping
little kids on us.
Ten-year-olds, a nine-year-olds to be fed and watched.
Seven-year-olds, they have their noses wiped.
No fun, no rest.
He made an angry, spitting noise.
Did they tell you that, he demanded?
Yes, agreed Calhoun.
I heard that.
and more. All the time, raged Frederick's sullenly. They were yelling at us, that the sun back home
was swelling. It was wobbling. It was throbbing like it was going to burst any minute.
They kept us scared that any second the ships had stopped coming because there wasn't any more
Fadra. And we were good little boys and girls, and we worked like hell. We tried to build what the
kids they sent us needed, and they kept sending younger and younger kids.
We got to the crack-up point.
We couldn't keep it up.
Night, day, every day, no fun, no loafing, nothing to do but work till you dropped,
and then get up and work till you dropped again.
He stopped.
Calhoun said,
So you stop believing that it could be that urgent.
You send some messengers back to check and see, and
and fathry's son looked perfectly normal to them.
There was no visible danger.
The older folks showed their scientific records,
and your messengers didn't believe them.
They decided they were faked.
They were tired.
All of you were tired.
Young people need fun.
You aren't having it.
So when your messengers came back and said the emergency was a lie,
you believe them.
You believed the older people were simply dumping all their burdens on you by lies.
"'We knew it,' asked Fredericks.
"'So we quit. We'd done our stuff. We were going to take time out and do some living.
We were a way back on having fun. We were a way back on rest. We were a way back just on shooting the breeze.
We were behind on everything. We'd been slaves, following blueprints, digging holes, and filling them up again.
He stopped.
When they said all the old folks were going to move in on us, that was the finish.
We're human. We've got a right to live like humans.
When it came to building more houses and planting more land so more people and old people
at that could move in to take over bossing us some more, we'd had it.
We hadn't gotten anything out of the job for ourselves.
If the old folks moved in, we never would.
They didn't mind working us to death, to hell with them.
The reaction, said Calhoun, was normal.
But if one assumption was mistaken, it could still be wrong.
What could be wrong? demanded Frederick's angrily.
The assumption that they lied, said Calhoun.
Maybe Fadra's son is getting ready to flare.
Maybe your messengers were mistaken.
Maybe you were told the truth.
Frederick spat.
Calhoun said,
Will you clean that up, please?
Frederick gaped at him.
Mop, said Calhoun, he gestured.
Frederick sneered.
Calhoun waited.
Murgatroyd said agitatedly,
Chee, chee, chee, chee!
Calhoun did not move.
After a long time, Fredericks took the mop and pushed it negligently over the place he'd spat on.
Thanks, said Calhoun.
He turned back to the control board.
He checked his course and referred to the half-century-old survey report on the Cannes' solar system.
He scowled.
Presently he sat over his shoulder.
How has the resting worked?
Does everybody feel better?
Enough better, said Frederick ominously, so we're going to keep things the way they are.
The old folks sent in a ship for a landing, and we took the landing grid and dumped rocks where it had run into them.
we're going to set up little grids all over so we can fling bombs up we make good bombs if they try to land anywhere besides canopolis and if they do make a landing they'll wish they hadn't all they've dared so far is drop printed stuff calling us names and saying we've got to do what they say
calhoun had the inner planet canis three firmly in the center of his forward screen he said negligently how about the little kids most of you have quit work you say
there's not much work bragged fredericks we had to make stuff automatic as we built it so we could all keep on making more things and not lose hands tending stuff we'd made we got the designs from home we do all right without working much
Calhoun reflected,
If it were possible for any society to exist without private property,
it would be this society composed exclusively of the young.
They did not want money as such.
They want what it buys now.
There would be no capitalists in a world populated only by the younger generation from Fatra.
It would be an interesting sort of society,
but thought for the future would be markedly lacking.
But, said Calhoun, what about the small children, the ones who need to be taken care of?
You haven't got anything automatic to take care of them.
Pretty near, Frederick's posted.
Some of the girls like attending kids, homely girls mostly.
But there's too many little ones, so we hooked up a sight circuit with multiple outlets for them.
Some of the girls play with a couple of the kids, and that keeps the other satisfied.
There was somebody studying pre-psych on Fadra, and he was sent off with the rest to dig holes and build houses.
He fixed up that trick so the girl he liked would be willing to take time off from tending kids.
There's plenty of good technicians on Canis III. We can make out.
There were evidently some very good technicians, but Calhoun began to feel sick.
A psych circuit, of course, was not in itself a harmful device.
it was part of individual psychiatric equipment, not med service work, and its value was proved.
In clinical use, it permitted a psychiatrist to share the consciousness of his patient during
interviews. He no longer had painfully to interpret his patient's thought processes by what he said.
He could observe the thought processes themselves. He could trace the blocks,
the mental sore spots, the ugly, not human urges which can
can become obsessions.
Yes, a psych circuit was an admirable device in itself.
But it was not a good thing to use for baby tending.
There would be a great room in which hundreds of small children would sit rapidly with
psych circuit receptors on their heads.
They would sit quietly, very quietly, giggling to themselves or murmuring.
They would be having a very wonderful time.
Nearby there would be a smaller room in which one or two other children played.
There would be older girls to help these few children actually play.
With what they considered adult attention every second,
and with deep affection for their self-appointed nurses,
why the children who actually played would have the very perfection of childhood pleasure.
And their experience would be shared by,
would simultaneously be known and felt by,
would be the conscious and complete experience of each of the hundreds of other children
tuned in on it by psych circuit.
Each would feel every thrill and sensation of those who truly thrilled and experienced.
But the children kept so happy would not be kept exercised nor stimulated to act or think
or react for themselves.
The effect of psych circuit child care would be that of drugs for keeping children from needing
attention. The merely receiving children would lose all initiative, all purpose, all energy.
They would come to wait for somebody else to play for them. And the death rate among them would
be high, and the health rate among those who lived would be low, and the injury to their
personalities would be permanent if they played by proxy long enough. And there was another
uglier thought. In a society, such as must exist on Canis III, there would be adolescents and
post-adolescents who could secure incredible, fascinating pleasures for themselves once they realized
what could be done with a psych circuit. Calhoun said evenly,
In 30 minutes or so you can call Canopolis on space phone. I'd like you to call ahead.
Will there be anybody on duty at the grid?
Frederick said, negligently.
There's usually somebody hanging out there.
It makes a good club.
But they're always hoping the old folks will try something.
If they do, there's the grid to take care of them.
We're landing with or without help, said Calhoun.
But if you don't call ahead and convince somebody that one of their own is returning from the wars,
they might take care of us with the landing grid.
Frederick's kept his jaunty air.
What'll I say about you?
This is a med ship, said Calhoun with precision.
According to the Interstellar Treaty Organization Agreement,
every planet's population can determine its government.
Every planet is necessarily independent.
I have nothing to do with who runs things or who they trade or communicate with.
I have nothing to do with anything but public health.
But they'll have heard about medships you had, hadn't you?
Yes, agreed Frederick's, when I went to school, before I was shipped off to here.
Right, said Calhoun, so you can figure out what to say.
He turned back to the control board, watching the steadily swelling Gippus disk of the planet
as the med ship drew near.
Presently he reached out and cut the drive.
He switched on the space phone.
Go ahead, he said dryly.
Talk us down or into trouble just as you please.
End of Part 3.
Part 4 of The Grandfather Wars by Murray Leinster.
This Libre Vox recording is in the public domain.
Part 4.
Evidence directs that any assurance at any time that there is nothing wrong or that everything is
all right, be regarded with suspicion.
Certainly, doctors often encounter patients who are ignorant of the nature of their trouble and
its cause, and, in addition, have had their symptoms appear so slowly and so gradually that they
were never noticed and still are not realized.
Manual Interstellar Medical Service, page 68.
It was a very singular society on Canis III.
After long and markedly irrelevant argument by Spacephone, the Med Shipwhip
went down to ground in the grip of the Canopolis landing grid.
This was managed with a deafness accounting to artistry.
Whoever handled the controls did so with that impassioned perfection
with which a young man can handle a mechanism he understands and worships.
But it did not follow that so accomplished an operator would think beyond the perfection of performance.
He came out and grinned proudly at the Med Ship when it rested, light as a feather,
on the clear, grassy space in the center of the city's landing grid.
He was a gangling 17 or 18.
A gang, not a guard, of similar age,
came swaggering to interview the two in the landed spacecraft.
Frederick's named where he'd been working and what he'd been doing
and how he'd been taken prisoner.
Nobody bothered to check his statements,
but his age was almost a guarantee that he belonged on Canis.
When he began his experiences as a prisoner among their enemies, all pretense of suspicion dropped
away.
The gang at the spaceport interjected questions and whooped at some of his answers, and slapped
each other in themselves ecstatically when he related some of the things he'd said and done in enemy
hands, and talked loudly and boastfully of what they would do if the old folks tried to carry
out their threats.
But Calhoun observed no real preparations.
beyond the perfect working condition of the grid itself.
Still, that ought to defend the planet adequately,
except against such a mobile spaceport as he'd been captured by himself.
When they turned to him for added reasons to despise the older generation,
Calhoun said coldly,
If you ask me, they can take over any time they're willing to kill a few of you to clear the way.
Certainly, if the way you're running this particular job is a sample,
They bristled, and Calhoun marveled at the tribal organization which had sprung up among them.
What Frederick has said in the ship began to fit neatly into place with what once had been pure anthropological theory.
He'd had to learn it because a medical man must know more than diseases.
He must also know the humans who have them.
Odmints of culture-instaked theory popped into his memory and applied exactly to what he
was discovering. The theory said that the tribal cultures, from which even the most civilized
social organizations stem, were not human inventions. The fundamental facts of human society
exist because human instinct directs them in exact parallel to the basic design of the social
lives of ants and bees. It seemed to Calhoun that he was seeing direct the operation of pure instinct
in the divisions of function in the society he had encountered.
Here, where a guard must be mounted against enemies,
he found young warriors.
They took the task because it was their instinct.
It was an hereditary impulse for young men of their age
to act as useful warriors at a post of danger.
There was nothing more important to them than prestige among their fellows.
They did not want wisdom or security or freedom, or security, or
families or possessions. The instinct of their age group directed them as specifically as successive
generations of social insects are directed. They moved about in gangs. They boasted vangloriously,
they loathed conspicuously, and they would take lunatic risks for no reason whatsoever.
But they would never build cities of themselves. That was the impulse of older men. In particular,
the warrior age group would be capable of immense and admirable skill in handling anything
which interested them, but they would never devise automatic devices to keep a city going with
next to no attention. They simply would not think so far ahead. They would fight, and they would
quarrel, and they would brag. But if this eccentric world had survived so far, it must have
additional tribal structure. It must have some more dedicated leadership,
than these flamboyant young men who guarded inadequately and operated perfectly the mechanism
of a spaceport facility that they would never have built.
I have got to talk to somebody higher up, said Calhoun, irritably.
A chief, really, a boss. Your war with your parents isn't my affair. I'm here on med service
business. I'm supposed to check the public health situation with the local authorities and exchange
information with them. So far as I'm concerned, this is a routine job.
The statement was not altogether truthful. In a sense, preventing unnecessary deaths was routine,
and in that meaning Calhoun had exactly the same purpose on Canis III as on any other planet
to which he might be sent. But the health hazards here were not routine. A society is an organism.
It is a whole.
Instinct theory says that it can only survive as a whole, which must be composed of such and such parts.
This society had suffered trauma from the predicted dissolution of Fadre's son.
Very many lives would be lost unnecessarily because the results of that traumatic experience could be healed.
But Calhoun's obligation was not to be stated in such terms to these young men.
"'Who was running things?' demanded Calhoun.
"'A man named Walker said his son was bossing things here.
He was pretty bitter about it, too.
Who's looking after the distribution of food,
and who's assigning who to raise more,
and who's seeing that the small children get fed and cared for?'
The spaceport gang looked blank.
Then somebody said negligently,
"'We take turns, getting stuff to eat for ourselves.
The ones who landed here first mostly go around yelling at everybody.
Sometimes the things they want get done, but they are mostly married now.
They live in a center over yonder.
He gestured.
Calhoun accepted it as a directive.
Can somebody take me there?
He asked.
Pretricks said, Granly.
I'll do it.
Going that way, anyhow.
Who's got a ground car I can use?
My girl will be worrying about me.
been worrying because she didn't know the old folks took me prisoner.
His proposal to acquire a ground car was greeted with derision.
There were ground cars, but those that did not need repairs were jealously reserved by individuals
for themselves and their closest friends.
There was squabbling.
Presently a scowling young man agreed to deliver Calhoun to the general area in which
the first landed of the colonists, now grown,
grim and authoritative, made their homes. It was annoying to wait, while so simple a matter was
discussed so vociferously. By the time it was settled, Fredericks had gone off in disgust.
The scowling youth produced his ground car. Calhoun got in. Mergatroyd, of course, was not left
behind, and the car was magnificent in polish and performance. Lavish effort and realability had gone
into its grooming and adjustment. With a spinning of wheels it shot into immediate high speed.
The dark-browed youngling drove with hair raising recklessness and expertness. He traversed the city
in minutes, and at a speed which allowed Calhoun only glimpses, but he could see that it was
almost unoccupied. Canopolis had been built by the youth of Fadra to the designs of their elders for
the reception of immigrants from another planet.
It had been put up in frantic haste, and used only as a receiving depot.
It had needed impassioned and dedicated labor, and sustained an exhausting concentration to get
it, and the rest of the colonial facilities built against a deadline of doom.
But now its builders were fed up with it.
It was practically empty.
The last arrivals had scattered to places where food supplies were nearer and
and a more satisfactory way of life was possible.
There were broken windows and spattered walls.
There was untidiness everywhere.
But there had been great pains taken in the buildings.
Some partially completed enterprises showed highly competent workmanship.
Then the city ended, and was a giant pile of structures which fell swiftly behind.
The highways were improvised.
They could be made more perfect later.
Across the horizon there were jerry-built villages, temporary by design, because there had been
such desperate need for so many of them so soon.
The ground car came to a stop with a screaming of brakes at the edge of such a jerry-built
group of small houses.
A woman ran to hiding.
A man ran into view.
Another and another and another.
They came ominously toward the car.
"'Hop out,' said the scowling driver.
He grinned faintly.
They don't want me here.
But I stir them up, eh?'
Calhoun stepped out of the ground car.
It whirled on one pair of wheels and sped back to the city,
its driver turning to make a derisive gesture at the men who had appeared.
They were still quite young men, younger than Calhoun.
They looked at him steadily.
He growled to himself.
Then he called.
I'm looking for somebody named Walker.
He's supposed to be the top man here.
A chance young man said sardonically.
I'm Walker, but I'm not tops.
Where'd you come from?
With a med service uniform and a turmoil on your shoulder,
you're not one of us.
Have you come to argue that we ought to give in to Fadra?
Calhoun snorted.
I have a message that an attack from space.
is due in three days, but that's all from Fadra. I'm a med service man. How's the health situation?
How are you equipped for doctors and such? How about hospitals? How's the death rate?
The younger Walker grinned savagely. This is a new colony. I doubt there are a hundred people
on the planet over twenty-five. How many doctors would there be in a population like ours?
I don't think there is a death rate. Do you know how we came to be?
be here?'
"'Your father told me,' said Calhoun,
at the military base on the next planet out.
They're getting ready for an attack, and they asked me to warn you about it,
three days from now.'
Young Walker ground his teeth.
They won't dare attack.
We'll smash them if they do.
They lied to us, worked us to death.
And no death rate, asked Calhoun.
The younger man knitted his brows.
There's no use you're arguing with us.
This is our world.
We made it and we're keeping it.
They made fools of us long enough.
And you've no health problems at all?
The sardonic young man hesitated.
One of the others said coldly,
Make him happy.
Let him talk to the women.
They're worried about some of the kids.
Calhoun breathed
a private sigh of relief. These relatively mature young men were the first landed colonists.
They'd had the hardest of all the tasks put upon the younger generation by the adults of
Fadra. They'd had the most back-breaking labor and the most urgent responsibilities.
They'd been worked in stress to the breaking point. They'd finally arrived at a decision of
desperation. But apparently things could be worse. It is the
custom everywhere for women to make themselves into whatever is most attractive to men.
Young girls in particular will adopt any tradition which is approved of by their prospective husbands.
And in a society to be formed brand new, appalling new traditions could be started.
But they hadn't. Deep-rooted instincts still worked.
Women, young women and girls appeared still to feel concern for young children which were not
even their own. And Frederick's story...
By all means, agreed Calhoun, if there's something wrong with the health of children.
Young Walker gestured and turned back toward the houses. He scowled as he walked.
Presently, he said defensively. You probably notice there aren't many people in the city.
Yes, said Calhoun, I noticed. We're not fully organized yet, said Walker.
more defensively still.
We weren't doing anything but build.
We've got to get organized before we'll have a regular economic system.
Some of the later comers don't know anything but building.
When they're ready for it, the city will be occupied.
We'll have a sound system for production and distribution of goods as anywhere else,
but we've just finished a revolution.
In a sense we're still in it.
But presently, this world will be pretty much like in.
any other, only better.
I see, said Calhoun.
Most people live in little settlements like this, close to the crops we grow.
People raise their own food and so on.
In a way, you may think we're primitive, but we've got some good technicians.
When they get over not having to work for the old folks and finish making things just for
themselves, we'll do all right.
After all, we weren't trained to make a complete world.
just for a worldly older people on Fadra to take over,
but we've taken it over for ourselves.
Yes, agreed Calhoun politely.
We'll work out the other things, said Young Walker truculently.
We'll have money and credit and hiring each other and so on.
Right now, defending ourselves is the top thing in everybody's mind.
Yes, agreed Calhoun again.
He was regarded as a lot of.
not quite an enemy, but he was not accepted as wholly neutral.
The older ones of us are married, Walker said firmly, and we feel responsibility, and we're
keeping things pretty well in line. We were lied to, though, and we resent it, and we
aren't letting in the old people to try to run us when we've proved we can make and run a world
ourselves. Calhoun said nothing. They reached a house.
Walker turned to enter it with a gesture for Calhoun to accompany him.
Calhoun halted.
Just a moment.
The person who drove me here, when he turned up, at least one woman, ran away, and you men came out, well, pretty pugnaciously.
Walker flushed angrily.
I said we had technicians.
Some of them made a gadget to help take care of the children, and that's harmless.
but they want to use it to spy on older people with it.
On us!
Invasion of privacy.
We don't like—well, they try to set up psych circuits near our homes.
They think it's fun to know what people say and do.
Syc circuits can be useful, observed Calhoun, or they can be pretty monstrous.
On the other hand—
No decent man would do it, snapped Young Walker, and no way.
girl would have anything to do with anybody, but there are some crazy fools.
You have described, said Calhoun dryly, a criminal class.
Only instead of stealing other people's possessions, they want to steal their sensations.
Peeping Tom stuff.
Age-dropping on what other people feel about those they care for, as well as what they do and say.
In a way, it's a delinquency problem, isn't it?
There can't be a civilization without problems, said Walker, but we're going to—he opened a door.
My wife works with the kids, the old people dumped on us, this way.
He motioned Calhoun inside the house. It was one of the shelters built during the frenzied building program
designed to make an emergency refuge for the population of a planet.
It was the roughest of machine-tool constructions. The floors were in the room.
not finished. The walls were not smooth. The equipment showed. But there had been attempts to do something
about the crudity. Colors had been used to try to make it home-like. When a girl came in from the
next room, Calhoun understood completely. She was a little younger than her husband, but not much.
She regarded Calhoun with that anxiety with which a housekeeper always regards an unexpected visitor,
hoping he will not notice defects.
This young wife had those feminine instincts which are much older than tradition.
Obligations and loyalties may be thrown aside,
but a housewife's idea of her role is unchangeable.
This is a med-service man, said Walker, briefly, indicating Calhoun.
I told him there was a health problem about some of the children.
To Calhoun, he said curtly.
This is my wife, Elsa.
Mercutroy said,
Chee, from where he clung to Calhoun's neck.
He was suddenly reassured.
He scrambled down to the floor.
Elsa smiled at him.
He's tame, she said delightedly.
Maybe.
Calhoun extended his hand.
She took it.
Mercutroyd, swaggering, extended his own black paw.
Instead of conflict and hatred here,
Merkertoyed seemed to sense an amiable sociability,
such as he was used to.
He felt more at home.
He began zestfully to act like the human being he liked to pretend he was.
He's delightful, said the girl.
May I show him to Jack?
Young Walker said,
Elsa's been helping with the smaller kids.
She says there's something that matter that she doesn't understand.
She has one of the kids here.
Bring him, Elsa.
She vanished.
A moment later she brought in a small boy.
He was probably.
probably six or seven. She carried him. He was thin. His eyes were bright, but he was completely
passive in her arms. She put him down in a chair, and he looked about alertly enough, but he simply
did not move. He saw Murgatroyd and beamed. Murgatroyd went over to the human who was
near his own size. Swaggering, he offered his paw once more. The boy giggled, but his hand lay in his
lap. He doesn't do anything, said Elsa, distressedly. His muscles work, but he doesn't work
them. He just sits and waits for things to be done for him. He acts as if he'd lost the idea of moving
or doing anything at all, and it's beginning to show up among the other children. They just sit.
They're bright enough. They see and understand, but they just sit.
Calhoun examined the boy.
His expression grew carefully impassive,
but he winced as he touched the pipe's stem arms and legs.
What muscles were there were almost like dough.
When he straightened up, despite himself, his mouth was awry.
Young Walker's wife said anxiously,
Do you know what's the matter with him?
Basically, said Calhoun with a sort of desperate irony,
he's in revolt. As the rest of you are in revolt against Fadra, he's in revolt against you.
You needed rest you didn't get, and recreation you couldn't have, and something besides back-breaking
labor under a load that grew heavier minute by minute for years. You revolted, and you've a fine
justification for the war in which you're engaged. But he has needed something he hasn't had, too.
so he's revolting against his lack, as you did, and he's dying, as you will presently do from
exactly the same final cause.
Walker frowned ominously.
I don't understand what you're saying, he said harshly.
Calhoun moistened his lips.
I spoke unprofessionally.
The real cause of his present troubles and your future ones is that a social system
has been shattered. The pieces can't live by themselves. And I don't know what medical measures
can be taken to cure an injured civilization. As a medical man, I may be whipped. But I'd better check.
Did I say, by the way, that the war fleet from FATRA is going to attack in just three days?
End of Part 4. Part 5 of The Grandfather Wars by Murray Langster. This Libre Fox recording is in the public
domain.
Part 5. Truth is the accord of an idea with a thing.
Very often an individual fails to discover the truth about some matter because he neglects
to become informed about something.
But even more often, the truth is never found out because somebody refuses to entertain
an idea.
Manual, Interstellar Medical Service, page 101 to 100.1.
On the first day, Calhoun went grimly to the crushes that had been set up by the first-arrived
young colonists when ships began to discharge really young children at the landing grid in
Canopoulos. The creches were not too much like orphanages, of course, but the younger
generation of Fadro had been put in a very rough situation by the adults. If the time of the
imminent solar explosion had been known, the matter would have been better handled.
Actually, the explosion had been delayed to date for nearly five years from the discovery that it must occur.
If that much leeway could have been predicted, older men and many machines would have been sent at first.
But the bursting could not be computed. It was a matter of probability.
Such and such unrhythmic variables must inevitably coincide sooner or later.
When they did. Final and ultimate catastrophe.
The sun would flare terribly and destroy all life in the solar system.
It could be calculated that the odds were even that the explosion would happen within one year,
two to one within two and five to one within three.
The odds were enormous against Fadre's surviving as long as it had.
The people of the mother world had had a highly improbable break,
but in whole common sense they done the sensible thing.
They tried to save those of their children who could take care of themselves first, and added
others as they dared.
But the burden of the young colonists had been monstrous.
Even adults would have tended to grow warped with such pressure to mine, build, plow,
and so, as was put upon the youngsters.
There had never been more than barely enough of food, and more mouths were always on the way.
There had never been extra shelter,
and younger and every younger cargos were constantly arriving,
each needing more of shelter and of care than the ones before.
And there was the world of adults still to be provided for.
Calhoun met the girls who had devoted themselves to the quasi-orphed children.
They bore themselves with rather touching airs of authority among the smaller children,
but they were capable of ferocity on occasion.
They had the need sometimes not to,
to defend their charges, but themselves against the clumsily romantic advances of loutish teenagers
who considered themselves fascinating. They had done very well.
The small children were exactly what Calhoun had anticipated in every way.
The small boy Calhoun had seen first was an extreme case, but the results of play by proxy
were visible everywhere. Calhoun constantly inspected one after a
another of the children's shelters. He was anxiously watched by the sober young faces of the nurses,
but they giggled when Mercutoy tried to go through Calhoun's actions of taking temperatures and
the like. He had to be stopped when he attempted to take a throat swabbing, which Calhoun has said
was pure routine. After the fourth such inspection, he said to Elsa,
I don't need to see any more. What's happened to the boys the same age as these girl
nurses, the 13 and 14 and 15-year-olds.
Elsa said uncomfortably,
They're mostly off in the wilds.
They hunt and fish and pioneer.
They don't care about girls.
Some of them grow things.
I don't think there'd be enough food if they didn't,
even though we're not getting anybody new to feed.
Calhoun nodded.
In all the cities of the galaxy,
small children of both sexes were to be seen everywhere,
and girls of the early two.
teenagers and adults. But the boys' age group he'd mentioned always made itself invisible.
It congregated in groups away from the public eye, and engaged in adventurous games and quite
futile explorations. It was socially quite self-sufficient everywhere.
Your husband, said Calhoun, carefully impassive, had better try to gather in some of them.
As I remember it, they're capable of a rather admirable romantic idea of duty.
for a while.
We're going to need some romanticists presently.
Elsa had faith in Calhoun now because he seemed concerned about the children, she said unhappily.
Do you really think the old people will attack?
I've grown older since I've been here.
Those of us who came first are almost like the people on Fadra, some ways.
The younger people are inclined to be suspicious of us because we try to guide them.
If you're confiding that you think there may be two sides to this war, Calhoun told her,
you are quite right. But see what your husband can do about gathering some of the hunting and
fishing members of the community. I've got to get back to my ship. He got himself driven back
to the landing grid. Walker did not drive him, but another of the now suspect men of 25 or so
from the shelter village of the first landed colonists. He was one of those who,
who'd worked with Walker from the beginning, and with him had been most embittered.
Now he found himself almost a member of an older generation.
He was still bitter against the people of Fadra, but this whole business is a mess,
he said darkly, as he drove through the nearly deserted city toward the landing grid.
We've got to figure out a way to organize things that'll be better than the old way.
But no organization at all is no good either.
We've got some tough young characters who like it this way, but they've got to be tamed down.
Calhoun had his own unsettling suspicions.
There have always been splendid ideas of social systems which will make earthly
paradises for their inhabitants.
Here, by happen chance, there had come to be a world inhabited only by the young.
He tried to put aside for the moment what he was unhappily sure he'd find out back at
ship. He tried to think about this seemingly perfect opportunity for a new and better organization
of human lives. But he couldn't believe in it. Culture instinct theory is pretty well worked out.
The Med Service considered it proven that the basic pattern of human societies is instinctual
rather than evolved by trial or error. The individual human being passes through a series of
instinct patterns which fit him at different times to perform different functions in a social
organization, which can vary but never change its kind. It has to make use of these successive
functions its members are driven by instinct to perform. If it does not use its members or give scope
to their instincts, it cannot survive. The more lethal attempts at novel societies tried not only
to make all their members alike, but tried to make them all alike at all ages, which could not work.
Calhoun thought unhappily of the tests he meant to make in the Med Ship.
As the ground car swerved into the great open center of the grid, he said,
My job is doing Med Service. I can't advise you how to plan a new world. If I could, I wouldn't.
But whoever does have authority here had better think about some very immediate troubles.
We'll fight if Fadra attacks, said the driver darkly.
They'll never get to ground alive, and if they do, they'll wish they hadn't.
I wasn't thinking of Fadra, said Calhoun.
The car stopped close by the Med Ship. He got out.
There had been attempts to enter the ship in his absence.
The gang which occupied the control building, and in theory protected Canis III against attack from the sky,
had tried to satisfy their curiosity about the little ship.
They'd even used torches on the metal, but they hadn't gotten in.
Calhoun did.
Mercutri chattered shrilly when he put him down.
He scampered relievedly about the cabin,
plainly rejoicing at being once more in familiar surroundings.
Calhoun paid no attention.
He closed and dogged the airlock door.
He switched on the space phone and said shortly,
Med Ship Esclippus 20 calling Fadron Fleet.
Med Ship Esclippus 20 calling
The loudspeaker fairly deafened him as somebody yelled into another spacephone mic in the grid control building.
Hey, you and the ship, stop that. No talking with the enemy.
Calhoun turned down the incoming volume and said patiently.
Med Ship Esclippus 20 calling Fleet from Fedra.
command fleet from Fedra, med ship Esclippus 20, calling,
There was a chorus of yullings from the nearby building.
The motley, swaggering, self-appointed landing-grid guard
had tried to break into the ship out of curiosity,
but they were vastly indignant when Calhoun did something of which they disapproved.
They made it impossible for him to have heard a reply from the space fleet,
presumably overhead.
But after a moment, someone in the control house evidently elbowed,
the others aside and shouted,
You, keep that up and we'll smash you.
We've got the grid to do it with, too.
Calhoun said curtly.
Med ship to control, I've something to tell you.
Suppose you listen, but not on the space phone.
Have your best grid technician come outside,
and then I shall tell him by speaker.
He snapped off the space phone and watched.
The control building fairly erupted,
indignant youths. After a moment he saw the gangling one who grinned so proudly when the
Med Ship was landed with absolute perfection. The others shouted and scowled at the ship.
Calhoun threw on the outside speaker, normally used for communication with the ground crew before
lifting. I'm set, said Calhoun coldly, for overdrive travel. My Duhainy cells are charged to the
limit. If you try to form a force-feel around this ship, I'll dump half a dozen overdrive charges
into it in one jolt that will blow every coil you've got. And then how you'll fight the ships
from Fadra. I'm going to talk to them on space phone. Listen in if you like, monitor it, but don't
try to bother me. He threw on the space phone again and patiently resumed his calling.
Med Ship Esclippus Twitty calling Fleet from Fadra.
Med ship calling fleet from Fadra?
He saw a violent argument outside the Grids' control building.
Some of the young figures raged, but the youth who'd handled the grid so professionally
raged at them.
Calhoun hadn't made an idle threat.
A grid field could be blown out.
A grid could be made useless by one of the ships it handled.
When a ship like Calhouns went into overdrive, it put out something like four ounces of pure
energy to form a field in which it could travel past the speed of light.
In terms of horsepower or kilowatt hours, so much force would be meaningless.
It was too big.
It was a quantity of energy whose mass was close to four ounces.
When the ship broke out of overdrive, that power was largely returned to the storage.
The loss was negligible compared to the total.
But turn loose into a grid's force field.
Even three or four such charges would work havoc with the grid's equipment.
Calhoun got an answer from emptiness, just as the members of the group by the control building
shouted each other down and went inside to listen with bitter unease and suspicion to his talk with the enemy.
Vadra Flea calling, said a growling voice in the spacephone space.
What do you want?
To exercise my authority as a Med Ship officer, said Calhoun heavily.
I warn you that I now declare this planet under quarantine.
All contact with it from space is forbidden until health hazards here are under control.
You will inform all other spacecraft and any other spaceport you may contact of this quarantine.
Message ends.
Silence.
A long silence.
The growling voice rasped.
What's that?
Repeat it.
Calhoun repeated it.
He switched off the phone and unpacked the throat swabbing
he'd made at the four children's shelters in turn.
He opened up his laboratory equipment.
He put a dilution of one throat swabbing into a culture slide
that allowed living organisms to be examined as they multiplied.
He began to check his highly specific suspicions.
Presently he was testing them with minute traces of various antibodies.
He made rough but reasonable certain identifications.
His expression grew very, very sober.
He took another swab sample and put it through the same process.
A third and fourth and fifth and tenth.
He looked very grim.
It was sunset outside when there was a hammering on the ship's hull.
He switched on a microphone and speaker.
What do you want?
He asked flatly.
The angry voice of young Walker came from the gathering darkness.
The screens showed a dozen or more inhabitants of Canis III, milling angrily about him.
Some were of the young warrior age.
They engaged in bitter argument.
But the younger Walker and four or five with him faced.
to ship with ominous quietness.
Watch this nonsense about quarantine, demanded Walker harshly from outside.
Not that we've space commerce to lose, but what does it mean?
It means, Calhoun told him, that your brave new world rates as a slum.
You've kept kids quiet with sight circuits and they haven't eaten properly and haven't exercised
at all.
They're weak for malnutrition and feeble from not doing their own playing.
They're like slum children used to be in past ages.
Here on Kenneth, you're about ready to wipe yourselves out.
You may have done it.
You're crazy, Snap Walker, but he was upset.
In the four shelters I visited, Calhoun said drearily,
I spotted four cases of early diphtheria,
two of typhoid, three of scarlet fever and measles,
and samples of nearly any other disease you care to name.
The kids have been developing these diseases out of weakness, and from the reservoir of infections,
we humans always carry with us.
They'd reached the contagious stage before I saw them, but all the kids are kept so quiet that
nobody noticed that they were sick.
They've certainly spread to each other, and their nurses, and therefore out into your general
population, all the infections needed for a first-rate multiple epidemic.
And you've no doctors?
no antibiotics, not even injectors to administer shots with if you had them.
You're crazy, cried Young Walker.
Crazy isn't this a Fadra trick to make us give in?
Fadre's trick, said Calhoun more drearily than before,
is an atom bomb they're going to drop into this landing grid.
I suspect quarantine or no quarantine, in just two days more.
Considering the total situation of...
I don't think that matters.
End of Part 5.
Part 6 of The Grandfather's War by Murray Langster.
This Libre Vox recording is in the public domain.
Part 6.
The most difficult of enterprises is to secure the cooperation of others in enterprises
those others did not think of first.
Manual. Interstellar Medical Service, page 189.
Calhoun worked all night, tending and inspecting the culture incubators which were part of the Med Ship's technical equipment.
In the children's shelters, he'd swabbed throats.
In the ship, he'd diluted the swabbing and examined them microscopically.
He'd been depressingly assured of his very worst fears as a medical man,
all of which could have been worked out in detail from the Sight Circuit System of Child Care,
boastfully described by Frederick's.
He could have written out his present results in advance
from a glance at the child Jack
shown him by the younger Walker's wife.
But he hated to find that objective information
agreed with what he would have predicted by theory.
In every human body, there are always germs.
The process of good health is in part a continual combat
with slight and unnoticed infections.
Because of victories over small invasions, a human body acquires defenses against larger invasions of contagion.
Without such constant small victories, a body ceases to keep its defenses strong against beachheads of infection.
Yet malnutrition or even exhaustion can weaken a body once admirably equipped for this sort of guerrilla warfare.
If an undernourished child fails to win one skirmish,
he can become overwhelmed by a contagion the same child would never have known about had he only been a little stronger.
But, overwhelmed, he is a sporadic case of disease, a case not traceable to another clinical case.
And then he is the origin of an epidemic.
In slum conditions, a disease not known in years can arise and spread like wildfire.
With the best of intentions and great technical ingenuity,
The younger generation colonists of Canis III had made that process inevitable among the younger children who were their last imposed burden.
The children were under-exercised, under-stimulated, and hence under-par in appetite and nutrition,
and it is an axiom of the med service that a single underfed child can endanger an entire planet.
Calhoun proved the fact with appalling certainty.
His cultures astounded even him.
But by dawn he had applied Murgatroyd's special genetic abilities to them.
Mergatroyd said,
Chee, in a protesting tone when Calhoun did what was necessary
at that small patch on his flank, which was quite insensitive.
But then Murgatroy shook himself and admiringly scowled back at Calhoun,
imitating the intent and worried air that Calhoun wore.
Then he followed Calhoun of.
about in high good spirits, strutting on his hind legs, man-fashioned, and pretending to set out
imaginary apparatus as Calhoun did, long ahead of time for what he hoped would occur.
Presently, Murgatroyd tired, a little quicker than usual, and went to sleep.
Calhoun bent over him and counted his respiration and heartbeat.
Murgatroyd slept on.
Calhoun gnawed his fingers in anxious expectation.
He'd come on this assignment with some resentment because he thought it foolish.
He carried on with increasing dismay as he found it not absurd.
Now he watched over Murgatroyd with the emotional concern a medical man feels
when lives depend upon his professional efficiency,
but that efficiency depends on something beyond his control.
Murgatroyd was that something this time, but there was one other.
The Tormall was a pleasant little animal, and Calhoun liked him very much.
But Tormalls were crew members of one-man-med ships because their metabolism was very similar to that of humans.
But no Tormol had ever been known to die of an infectious disease.
They could play host to human infections, but only once and only lightly.
It appeared that the furry little creatures had a hair-tricker sensitivity to backer.
bacterial toxins. The presence of infective material in their bloodstreams produced instant and violent
reaction and the production of antibodies in large quantity. Theorists said that Tormols had dynamic
immunity systems instead of passive ones like humans. Their body chemistry seemed to look
truculently for microscopic enemies to destroy rather than to wait for something to develop
before they fought it.
If he reacted normally now, in a matter of hours, his bloodstream would be saturated with
antibodies, or an antibody, lethal to the cultures Calhoun had injected.
There was, however, one unfortunate fact.
Mergatorid weighed perhaps 20 pounds.
There was most of a planetary population needing antibodies only he could produce.
He slept from breakfast time to lunch.
He breathed slightly faster than he should.
His heartbeat was troubled.
Calhoun swore a little when noon came.
He looked at the equipment all laid out for biological microanalysis,
tiny test tubes holding half a drop,
reagent flasks dispensing fractions of milliliter's,
tools and scales much tinier than doll size.
If he could determine the structure and formula of an antibody or antibodies,
that Mercuteroid's tiny body formed
why synthesis in the quantity
should be possible.
Only the Med Ship had not
materials for so great an amount of product.
There was only one chance.
Calhoun threw the spacephone switch.
Instantly a voice came from the speaker.
Playing Med Ship Esclippus 20.
Fadrefully calling Med Ship Esclippus 20.
Med Ship answering, said Calhoun.
What is it?
The voice went on.
Calling Med Ship 20, calling Med Ship Esclippus 20, calling...
It went on interminably.
It was a very long way off if it took so long for Calhoun's answer to be heard.
But the call formula broke off.
Med Ship, our doctors want to know the trouble on Canis.
Can we help?
We've hospital ships equipped and ready.
The question, said Calhoun steadily, is a question.
whether I can make a formula and structure identification, and whether you can synthesize what I
identify. How's your lab? How are you supplied with biological crudes? He waited. By the
interval between his answer and a reply to it, the ship he communicated with was some five million
miles or more away, but it was still not as far as the next outward planet where the Fadron fleet was
spaced. While he waited for his answer, Calhoun heard murmurings. They would come from the
control building at the side of the grid. The loutish, suspicious gang there was listening.
Calhoun had threatened to wreck the grid if they tried anything on the Med Ship, but he could do
nothing unless they tried to use a force field. They listened in, muttering among themselves.
A long time later, the voice from space came back.
the fleet of the older generation of fadra was grounded save for observation ships like the one speaking the fleet had full biological equipment for any emergency it could synthesize any desired compound up to
the degree of complexity and the classification was satisfactory day before yesterday said cowhoun when you had me a ground on canis four your leader walker said your children on this planet were
destroying your grandchildren. He didn't say how. But the process is well underway. Only the whole
population will probably go with them. Most of the population, anyhow. I'm going to need those
hospital ships and your best biological chemists. I hope. Get them started this way, fast. I'll
try to make a deal for at least the hospital ships to be allowed to land. Over? He did not flick off
the space phone.
He listened, and a bitter, envenomed voice came from nearby.
Sure, we'll let them land ships they say are hospital ships, loaded down with men and guns.
We'll land them ourselves, we will.
There was a click.
The space phone in the control building was turned off.
Calhoun turned back to the sleeping murgatroyd.
There was a movement about the grid control building.
Sleak, glistening ground cars hurtled away, two of them.
Calhoun turned then to the planetary communicator.
It could break in on any wavelength used for radio communication under a planet's
heavy side roof.
He had to get in touch with Walker or some other of the first landed colonists.
They were still embittered against their homeworld,
but they must be beginning to realize that Calhoun had told the truth about the youngest
children. They'd find sickness if they look for it. But the planetary communicator picked up
nothing. No radiation wavelength was in use. There was no organized news service. The
young people on Canis 3 were too self-centered to care about news. There were no entertainment
programs. Only show-offs would want to broadcast, and show-offs would not make the apparatus.
So Calhoun could not communicate, save by spacephone, with the range of millions of miles,
and the ship's exterior loudspeakers with the range of hundreds of feet.
If he left the Med Ship, he wasn't likely to be able to fight his way back in.
He couldn't find the young Walker on foot in any case, and he did not know anyone else to seek.
Besides, there was work to be done in the ship.
Before Mergertrard waked, the two ground cars had returned.
At intervals, nearly a dozen other cars followed to the control building,
hurtling across the grid's clear center with magnificent clouds of dust following them.
They braked violently when they arrived.
Youth piled out.
Some of them yelled at the Med Ship and made threatening gestures.
They swarmed into the building.
Murgatroyd said tentatively,
"'Chi?'
He was awake.
Calhoun could have embraced him.
"'Now we see what we see,' he said grimly.
"'I hope you've done your stuff, Murgatroyd.'
Murgatroyd came obligingly to him,
and Calhoun lifted him to the table he had ready.
Again, what he did did not hurt.
A tiny patch on Murgatroyd's side had been made
permanently insensitive shortly after he was born.
Calhoun extracted a quantity of what he hoped was a highly concentrated bacterial antagonist.
He took 30 cc's in all.
He clumped the red cells.
He separated the serum.
He diluted an infinitesimal bit of it and with a steady hand,
added it to a slide of the same cultures living on which Murgatroyd's dynamic immunity system had worked.
The cultures died immediately.
Calhoun had an antibody sample, which could end the intolerable, now spreading disaster on the world of young people, if he could analyze it swiftly and accurately, and if the hospital ships from Fadra could be landed, and if they could synthesize some highly complex antibody compounds, and if the inhabitants of Canis 3 would lay aside their hatred.
He heard a tapping sound on the Med Ship's hull.
He looked at a screen.
Two youths stood in the doorway of the control building, leisurely shooting at the Med Ship with sporting weapons.
Calhoun set to work.
Sporting rifles were not apt to do much damage.
For an hour, while there was the occasional clanking of a missile against the ship's outer planking,
he worked at the infinitely delicate job of separating serum from its antimic.
content. For another hour he tried to separate the antibody into fractions. Incredibly, it would
not separate. It was one substance only. There was a crackling sound, and the whole ship shivered.
The screen showed a cloud of smoke drifting away. The members of the grid guard had detonated
some explosive intended for mining most likely against one of the landing fins. Calhoun
swore. His call to the Fadron fleet was the cause. The grid guard meant to allow no landing.
He threatened to blow out their controls if they tried to use the grid on the med ship,
but they wanted it ready for use as a weapon against the space fleet. They couldn't use it
against him. He couldn't damage it unless they tried. They wanted him away. He went back to
his work. From time to time, annoyedly, he looked up at the outside. Presently, a young warrior group
moved toward the ship, carrying something very heavy, a larger charge of explosive, perhaps.
He waited until they were within yards of the ship. He stabbed the emergency rocket button.
A thin pencil-like rod of flame shot downward between the landing fins. It was blue-white, the white of a sun's
surface. For one instant it splashed out hungrily before it bored and melted a hole into the ground
itself into which to flow. But in that instant it had ignited the covering of the burden the
youths carried. They dropped it and fled. The pencil flame bored deeper and deeper into the ground.
Clouds of smoke and steam arose. There was a lurid flash. The burden that the young warriors had
abandoned, vanished in a flare that looked like a lightning bolt. The ship quivered from the detonation.
A crater appeared where the explosive had been. Calhoun cut off the emergency rocket, which had burned
for ten seconds at one-quarter thrust. Sunset came and night fell for the second time. He noticed
abruptly that some of the ground cars from about the control building went racing away.
but they did not pass close to the med ship in their departure.
He labored on.
He spent nearly thirty hours making cultures from the specimens
swabbed from children's throats and injecting murgatroyd and waiting for his reaction
and then separating a tiny quantity of antibody,
which would not total more than the dust from a butterfly's wing,
from the serum he obtained.
Now he worked on through the night.
Far away, some tens or scores of millions of miles,
the hospital ships of the Fadron fleet took off from the next outward planet.
They would be coming at full speed toward Canis III.
They would need the results of the work Calhoun was doing,
if they were to prevent an appalling multiple plague,
which could wipe out all the sacrifice the building of the colony had entailed.
But his work had to be exact.
It was tedious,
It was exacting.
It was exhaustingly time-consuming.
He did have the help of previous experience and the knowledge that the most probable
molecular design would include this group of radicals and probably that, and side chains
like this might be looked for, and copolymers might.
But he was blurry-eyed and worn out before dawn came again.
His eyes felt as if there were grains of sand beneath him.
their lids. His brain felt dry, felt fibrous inside his skull as if it were ex-celior.
But when the first red colors showed in the east with the towers of the city against them,
he had the blueprint of what should be the complex molecule formed in mercantroids' furry body.
He had just begun to realize vaguely that his work was done, when twin glaring lights came
bouncing and plunging across the empty center of the grid.
They were extraordinarily bright in the ruddy darkness.
They stopped.
A man jumped from the ground car and ran toward the ship.
Calhoun wearily threw on the outer microphones and speakers.
What's the matter now?
The man was the younger Walker.
You're right, call Walker's voice strange to the breaking point.
There is sickness everywhere.
There's an epidemic.
It's just beginning. People felt tired and peevish and shut themselves away. Nobody realized.
But they've got fevers. They're showing rashes. There's some delirium. The smallest children are
worst. They were always quiet, but it's everywhere. We've never had real sickness before.
What can we do? Calhoun said tiredly,
I've got the design for an antibody. Murgatroyd made it.
It's what he's for.
The hospital ships from Fadra are on the way now.
They'll start turning it out in quantity,
and their doctors will start giving everybody shots of it.
Young Walker cried out fiercely.
But that would mean they'd land.
They'd take over.
I can't let them land.
I haven't the power.
Nobody has.
Too many of us would rather die than let them land.
They lie to us.
It's bad enough to have them hovering outside.
If they land, they'll be fighting everywhere and forever.
We can't let them help us.
We won't.
We'll fight.
We'll die first.
Calhoun blinked owlishly.
That, he said exhaustedly,
is something you have to figure out for yourself.
If you are determined to die, I can't stop you.
Die first or die second, it's your choice.
You make it.
I'm going to sleep.
He cut off the mic and speakers.
He couldn't keep his eyes open.
End to Part 6.
Part 7 of The Grandfather's War by Murray Leinster.
This Learyvox recording is in the public domain.
Part 7.
As a strictly practical matter, a man who has to leave a task that he has finished and wishes
it to remain as he leaves it, usually finds it necessary to give the credit for his
work to someone who will remain on the spot and will thereby be moved to protect and defend it
so long as he lives. Manual Interstellar Medical Service, page 167-68. Murgatroy tugged at Calhoun and shrilled
anxiously into his ear. "'Chee, chee, he said frantically. "'Chi, Chee, Chee!'
Calhoun blinked open his eyes. There was a crashing sound, and the med-shely.
ship swayed upon its landing fins. It almost went over. It teetered horribly, and then slowly swung back
past uprightness and tilted nearly as far in the opposite direction. There were crunching sounds,
as the soil partly gave way beneath one landing fin. Then Calhoun waited thoroughly. In one movement,
he was up and launching himself across the cabin to the controlled chair. There was another violent impact.
He swept his hand across the row of studs which turned on all sources of information and communication.
The screens came on, and the space phone, and the outside mics and loudspeakers,
and even the planetary communication unit, which would have reported had there been any use of the electromagnetic spectrum in the atmosphere of this planet.
Bedlam filled the cabin.
From the spacephone speaker, a stentorian voice shouted.
This is our last word.
Permit our landing or...
A thunderous detonation was reported by the outside mics.
The Med Ship fairly bounced.
There was swirling white smoke outside the ship.
It was mid-morning now,
and the giant lacy structure of the landing grid
was silhouetted against a deep blue sky.
There were cracklings from some electric storm,
perhaps a thousand miles away.
There were shoutings, also brought in by the outside mics.
Two groups of figures, 50 or 100 yards from the Med Ship,
labored furiously over some objects on the ground.
Smoke billowed out.
Then a heavy blast-like, boom!
Something came spinning through the air, end over end,
with sputtering sparks trailing behind it.
It fell close by the base of the upright Med Ship.
Calhoun struck down the emergency rocket stud as it exploded.
The roar of the rocket filled the interior of the ship.
The spacephone speaker bellowed again.
We've got a Megaton bomb missile headed down.
This is our last word.
Permit landing or we come in fighting.
The object from the crude cannon went off violently.
With the emergency rocket flaming to help, it lifted the Med Ship, which jerked upward,
settled back, and only two of its fins touched solidity.
It began to topple because there was no support for the third.
Once toppled over, it would be helpless.
It could be blasted with deliberately placed charges between its hull and the ground.
A crater already existed where support for the third landing fin should have been.
Calhoun pushed the stud down full.
The ship steadied and lifted.
It went swinging across the level center of the landing grid.
Its slender, ultra-high-velocity flame knifed down through the sod,
leaving a smoking incandescent slash behind.
The figures about the bomb-throwers scattered and fled.
The Med Ship straightened to an upright position and began to rise.
Calhoun swore.
The grid was the planet's defense against landings from space,
because it could fling out missiles of any size,
with perfect aim at any target within some hundred thousand miles,
a good twelve planetary diameters.
Its operators meant to defy the fleet from Thedra
and had to get rid of the med ship before they dared energize its coils.
Now they were rid of it.
Now they could throw bombs,
boulders or anything else its force fields could handle.
The space phone roared again.
On the ground there.
Our missile is aimed straight for your grid.
It carries a megatoned fishing bomb.
Evacuate the area.
Calhoun swore again.
The gang, the guard, the young warrior group at the grid, would be far too self-confident
to heed such a threat.
If there were wiser heads on Canis 3, they could not enforce their commands.
A human community has to be complete or it is not workable.
The civilization which had existed on Fadra too was shattered by the coming doom of its sun.
The fragments on Fadra in the fleet in each small occupied community on Canis 3 were incomplete
and incapable of thinking or acting in concert with any other.
Every small group on this planet certainly gave only lip service to the rest.
The young world was inherently incapable of organizing itself, save on a miniature scale.
And one such miniature group had the grid and would fight with it regardless of the wishes of any other,
because that group happened to be composed of instinct-driven members of the young warrior.
group. But he was still within the half-mile-high fence of the grid's steel structure.
He strapped himself in his seat. The ship rose and rose. It came level with the top of the
colony's one defense against space. The peculiar corrugated copper lip of that structure,
formed into the force-field guide which made it usable, swung toward him. He raised the rocket
thrust and shot skyward.
A deafening bellow came from the speakers.
Yeah, go on out and join the old folk. We'll get you.
Obviously, the voice was from the ground below him.
The ship flashed upward. Calhoun rasped into the spacephone mic himself.
Med ship calling fleet, call back that missile. I've got the antibody structure.
This is no time for fighting. Call your missile back.
Durisive laughter, again from the ground.
Then the heavy, growling voice of an older man.
Keep out of the way, Med Ship.
These young fools are destroying themselves.
Now they're destroying our grandchildren.
If we hadn't been soft-hearted before, if we'd fought them from the beginning,
the little ones wouldn't be dying now.
Keep out of the way.
If you can help us, it'll be after.
we've won the war.
The sky turned purple at the height Calhoun had reached.
It went black.
The sun, Canis, flamed and flared against the background of ebony space,
sprinkled with a thousand million colored stars.
The Med Ship continued to rise.
Calhoun felt singularly and helplessly alone.
Below him the sunlit surface of a world spread out.
its edge already curving, cloud masses in its atmosphere veiling the details of mountains and green-clad plains.
There was the blue of ocean creeping in.
The city of the landing grid was tiny now.
The brown of plowed fields was no longer divided into rectangular shapes.
It was a mere brownish haze between the colorings of as yet untouched virgin areas.
The colonists of Canis III had so far,
made only a part of the new world their own.
Many times more remained to be turned to human use.
The rear screen showed something coming upward.
Masses of stuff, without shape, but with terrific velocity.
It was inchoate, indefinite stuff.
It was plain dirt from the center of the landing grid's floor,
flung upward with the horrible power available for the landing and launching of ships.
and, focused upon it, the force fields of the grid could control it absolutely for a hundred
thousand miles. Calhoun swerved ever so slightly. His own velocity had reached miles per second,
but the formless mass following him was traveling at tens. It would not matter what such a hurling
missile was. At such velocity, it would not strike like a mass, but like a meteor shower,
flaring into incandescence when it touched and vaporized the med ship with itself in the flame of impact.
But the grid would have to let go before it hit.
There was monstrous stored power in the ship's Duhaini cells.
If so much raw energy were released into anything on which a force field was focused,
it would destroy the source of the field.
The grid could control its battering ram until the very last fraction of a second,
but then it must release, and its operator knew it.
Calhoun swung his ship frantically.
The mass of speeding planet matter raced past no more than hundreds of yards away.
It was released.
It would go on through empty space for months or years, perhaps forever.
Calhoun swung back to his upward course.
Now he sent raging commands before him.
Pull back that missile!
You can't land a bomb on Canis.
There are people there.
You can't drop a bomb on Canis?
There was no answer.
He raged again.
Med Ship calling Fadra Fleet.
There's disease on Canis.
Your children and grandchildren are stricken.
You can't fight your way to help them.
You can't blast your way to sick beds.
You've got to negotiate.
You've got to negotiate.
to compromise.
You've got to make a bargain?
Are you and they together?
A snarling voice from the ground, said spitefully.
Never mind, little medman.
Let them try to land.
Let them try to take over and boss us.
We listen to them long enough.
Let them try to land and see what happens.
We've got their fleet spotted.
We'll take care of them.
Then the growling tones Calhoun had come to associate,
with Fadra.
You keep out of the way, Med Ship.
If our young children are sick, we're going to them.
We're just beyond the area in which no drive will work.
When the grid has been blasted, our landing ship will go down and we'll come in.
Our missile is only half an hour from Target now.
We'll begin our landing in three hours or less.
Out of the way!
Calhoun said very bitter and extremely impolite words.
but he faced an absolute emotional stalemate between enemies of whom both were in the wrong.
The frantic anger of the adults of Fadra, barred from the world to which they sent their children first
so they could stay where doom awaited, was matched by the embittered revolt of the young people
who had been worked past endurance and burdened past anyone's power to tolerate.
There could be no compromise.
It was not possible for either side to confess even,
partial defeat by the other. The quarrel had to be fought to a finish as between the opposing sides,
and then hatred would remain, no matter which side one. Such hatred could not be reasoned with.
It could only be replaced by a greater hatred. Calhoun ground his teeth. The Med Ship hurtled out
from the sunlit Canis III. Somewhere, not many thousands of miles away, the fleet of Phaedra
clustered. Its crews were raging, but they were sick with anxiety about the enemies they
prepared to fight. A ground. There was hatred among the older of the colonists, the young warrior
group in particular, because that is the group in which hate is appropriate. And there was no
less a sickish disturbance because even in being right they were wrong. Every decent impulse that
had been played upon to make them exhaust themselves before their revolt, now,
protested the consequences of their revolt.
Yet they believed that in revolting they were justified.
Murgatroyd did not like the continued roar of emergency rockets.
He climbed up on Calhoun's lap and protested.
Chee! he said urgently.
Chee! Chee!
Calhoun grunted.
Mergatroyd, he said,
It is a med-service rule that a med-ship man is expendable in case of need.
I'm very much afraid that we've got to be expended.
Hang on now.
We try some action.
He turned the med ship end for end and fed full power to the rockets.
The ship could decelerate even faster that it had gathered speed.
He set the nearest object indicator to high gain.
It showed the now retreating mass of stone and soil from Canis.
Calhoun then set up a scanner.
to examine a particular part of the sky.
Since fathers can be insulted, he observed,
they've made a missile to fight its way down
through anything that's thrown at it.
It'll be remote-controlled for the purpose.
It's very doubtful that there's a spaceship on the planet
to fight it back.
There has been no reference to one anyhow.
So what the missile will have to fight off
will be stuffed from the landing grid only,
which is good.
Moreover, fathers being what they are, regardless that missile won't be a high-speed one.
They'll want to be able to call it back at the last minute. They'll hope to.
"'Chea,' said Murgatroy, insisting that he didn't like the rocket roar.
So we will make ourselves as unpopular as possible with the fathers,' observed Calhoun,
and if we live through it we will make ourselves even more cordially hated by the sons.
And then they will be able to tolerate each other a little because they both hate us so much.
And so the public health situation on Canis III may be resolved.
Ah!
The nearest object indicator showed something moving toward the Med Ship.
The scanner repeated the information in greater detail.
There was a small object.
headed toward the planet from empty space.
Its velocity and course, Calhoun put on double acceleration to intercept it, while he pointed
the ship quartering so he continued to lose outward speed.
Ten minutes later, the space phone growled.
Madhep, what do you think you're doing?
Getting in trouble, said Calhoun briefly.
Silence.
The screens showed a tiny pinpoint of moving light.
away toward emptiness. Calhoun computed his course. He changed it.
Medjib, rasped the spacephone. Keep out of the way of our missile. It's a Megaton bomb.
Calhoun said, irrelevantly. Those who in quarrels interpose must often wipe a bloody nose,
he added. I know what it is. Let it alone, rasped the voice. The grid on the ground has
spotted it. They're sending up rocks to fight it. They're rotten marksmen, said Calhoun.
They missed me. He aimed his ship. He knew the capacities of his ship as only a man who'd
handle one for a long time could. He knew exactly what it could do. The rocket from remoteness,
the Megaton bomb-guided missile, came smoking furiously from the stars. Calhoun seemed to throw his
ship into a collision course.
The rocket swerved to avoid him, though guided from many thousands of miles away.
There was a trivial time lag, too.
Between the time its scanners picked up a picture and transmitted it, and the transmission
reached the Phasian fleet, and the controlling impulses reached the missile in response.
Calhoun counted on that.
He had to.
But he wasn't trying for a collision.
He was forcing evasive action.
He secured it.
The rocket slanted itself to dart aside and Calhoun threw the Med Ship into a flip-flop,
and, it was a hair-raising thing, slashed the rocket lengthwise with his rocket flame.
That flame was less than half an inch thick, but it was of the temperature of the surface of a star,
and in emptiness it was some hundreds of yards long.
You slice the rocket neatly.
It flamed hideously, and even so full.
far, Calhoun felt a cushioned impact from the flame. But that was the missile's rocket fuel.
An atom bomb is the one known kind of bomb which will not be exploded by being sliced in half.
The fragments of the guided missile went on toward the planet, but they were harmless.
All right, said the space phone icily, but Calhoun thought there was relief in the voice.
You've only delayed our landing and lost a good many lives to disease.
Calhoun swallowed something he suspected was his heart come up into his throat.
Now, he said, we'll see if that's true.
His ship had lost its spaceward velocity before it met the missile.
Now it was gaining velocity toward the planet.
He cut off the rocket to observe.
He swung the hull about and gave a couple of short rocket blasts.
I'd better get economical, he told Mercutroyd.
rocket fuel is hard to come by this far out in space.
If I don't watch out, we'll be caught in orbit here with no way to get down.
I don't think the local inhabitants would be inclined to help us.
His lateral dash at the missile had given him something close to orbital speed,
relative to the planet's surface, though.
The Med Ship went floating with seemingly infinite leisure
around the vast bulk of the embattled world.
In less than half an hour, it was deep in the black-de-and-a-half-hour.
it was deep in the blackness of Candace's nighttime shadow.
In three-quarters of an hour, it came out again at the sunrise edge, barely 400 miles high.
Not quite speed enough for a true orbit, he told Murgertrard critically.
I give a lot for a good map.
He watched alertly.
He could gain more height if he needed to, but he was worried about rocket fuel.
It was intended for dire emergencies only.
It weighed too much to be carried in quantity.
He spotted the city of Canopoulos on the horizon.
He became furiously busy.
He inverted the little ship and dived down into atmosphere.
He killed speed with rocket flames and air friction together, falling recklessly the while.
He was barely two miles high when he swept past a ridge of mountains and the city lay ahead of him and below.
He could have crashed just short of it.
but he spent more fuel to stay aloft.
He used the rockets twice, delicately.
A ground speed of perhaps as little as 200 miles an hour
supported at the end by a jetting hair-thin rocket flame
that was like a rod of electric arc fire,
he swept across the top of the landing grid.
The sword-like flame washed briefly over the nearest edge.
Very briefly.
The flame cut a slashed down through the steel girders
and heavy copper cables together.
The rockets roared furiously.
That one disabling cut at the grid
had been on a downward darting drift.
Now the ship shouted and swooped up and on,
and it swept above the far side of the grid
only yards from the wide strip of copper
which guided its force-fields out into space.
Here it cut cables, girders, and force-field guide
together for better than 200 feet from the top.
The grid was useless until painstaking labor had made the damage good.
Calhoun used nearly the last of his fuel for height, while he said,
crisply on the space phone.
Calling fleet, calling fleet, met ship calling fleet.
I've disabled the landing grid on Canopolis.
You can come in now and take care of the sick.
There are no weapons aground to speak of, and if you don't get trick or happy, there should be no fighting.
I'll be landed off somewhere.
wearing the hills to the north of the town.
If the local inhabitants don't pack explosive out and crack the ship to get at me,
I'll have the facts on the antibody ready for you.
In fact, as soon as I get down, I'll give them to you by space phone just in case.
It was the near thing, though.
His rocket fuel was exhausted when he hit the ground.
The flame sputtered and stopped when the ship was three feet from touching.
It fell over, splintering trees.
It was distinctly a rough landing.
Mercutroid was very indignant about it.
He scolded shrilly while Calhoun unstrapped himself from the chair, and when he looked out to see where they were.
It was a week later when the Med Ship, brought to the grid for repair and refueling, was ready for space again.
The original landing grid still stood, of course, but it was straddled and overwhelmed, huge as it was,
by the utterly gigantic flying grid from Fadra.
There were not many ships aground, though.
As Calhoun moved toward the control building,
now connected by cable to the control quarters in the flying grid,
one of the few ships remaining seemed to fall toward the sky.
A second ship followed only seconds later.
He went into the control building.
Walker, the elder from Fadra, nodded remotely as he entered.
The younger Walker scalded him.
He had been in consultation with his father, and the atmosphere was one of great reserve.
Hmm, said the elder Walker gruffly.
What's the report?
Fairly good, said Calhoun.
There was one lot of antibody that seemed to have been a trifle under strength,
but the general situation seems satisfactory.
There'll be a few more cases of one thing or another, of course, cases that are incubating now,
but they'll do all right on the antibody shots.
They have so far at any rate.
He said to the younger Walker,
You did a very good job rounding up the 13 to 15-year-olds
to escort the fleet doctors and handle the patients for them.
They took themselves very seriously.
They were ideal for the job.
Your young warrior group,
a lot of them, said young Walker, dowerly, have taken to the woods.
They swear they'll never give in.
How about the girls?
Young Walker shrugged.
They're fluttering around and beginning to talk about clothes.
When old women arrive, there'll be dressmaking.
And the lads in the woods, said Calhoun, will come out to fascinate and be fascinated instead.
Do you think there will really be much trouble?
No, said young Walker sourly.
Some of our younger crowd seem relieved to be rid of responsibility.
But interposed the other.
Older Walker gruffly? He wants it. He thrives on it. He'll get it. He harrumped.
The same with the others who showed what they could do here. We oldsters need them.
We don't plan any reprisals. Calhoun raised his eyebrows. Should I be surprised?
The Elder Walker snorted. You didn't expect us to fall into each other's arms after what's
happened, did you? No. But we are going to try to ignore.
our differences as much as we can. We won't forget them, though. I suspect, said Calhoun,
that they'll be harder to remember than you think. You had a culture that split apart. Its pieces
were incomplete, and a society has to be complete to survive. It isn't a human invention. It's
something we have an instinct for, as birds have an instinct to build nests. When we build a culture
according to our instincts, we get along.
When that's impossible, there's trouble.
Then he said, I'm not trying to lecture you.
Oh, said the elder Walker.
You aren't?
Calhoun grinned.
I thought I'd be the most unpopular man on this planet, he said cheerfully, and I am.
I interfered in everybody's business, and nobody carried out his plans the way he wanted to.
But at least nobody feels like he won.
You'll be pleased when I lift the quarantine and take off, won't you?'
The older Walker said scornfully,
"'We're paying no attention to your quarantine.
Our fleet's loading up our wives on Fadra to ferry them here as fast as overdrive will do it.
Do you think we'd pay any attention to your quarantine?'
Calhoun grinned again.
The younger Walker said painfully,
"'I suppose you think we should.'
He stopped and said very carefully.
What you did was for our good, all right, but it hurts us more than it does you. In twenty years,
maybe we'll be able to laugh at ourselves. Then we'll feel grateful. Now we know what we owe you,
and we don't like it. And that, said Calhoun, means that everything is back to normal. That's the
traditional attitude toward all medical men. Ode them a lot and hate to pay. I'll sign the
quarantine release and take off as soon as you give me some rocket fuel, just in case of emergency.
Right away, said the two walkers in unison. Calhoun snapped his fingers.
Murgatroyd swaggered to his side. Calhoun took the little turmoil's black paw in his hand.
Come along, Murgatroyd, he said cheerfully. You're the only person I really treated badly,
and you don't mind. I suppose the moral of all this is that a turmoil
is man's best friend.
End of Part 7.
End of the Grandfather's War by Murray Leinster.
